PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Acute renal failure in children. Multicenter prospective cohort study in medium-complexity intensive care units from the Colombian southeast.

  • Jaime M Restrepo,
  • Mónica V Mondragon,
  • Jessica M Forero-Delgadillo,
  • Rubén E Lasso,
  • Eliana Zemanate,
  • Yessica Bravo,
  • Gastón E Castillo,
  • Stefany Tetay,
  • Natalia Cabal,
  • José A Calvache

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235976
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. e0235976

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundAcute kidney injury is frequent in critically ill children; however, it varies in causality and epidemiology according to the level of patient care complexity. A multicenter prospective cohort study was conducted in four medium-complexity pediatric intensive care units from the Colombian southeast aimed to estimate the clinical prognosis of patients with diagnosis of acute kidney injury.MethodsWe included children >28 days and ResultsPrevalence at admission of acute kidney injury was 5.2% (95%CI 4.3% to 6.2%). It was found that 71% of the patients had their maximum KDIGO on day one; an increment in the maximum stage of acute kidney injury increased the pediatric intensive care unit stay. Patients with maximum KDIGO 3 were associated with greater use of mechanical ventilation (47%), compared with maximum KDIGO 2 (37%) and maximum KDIGO 1 (16%). Eight patients with maximum KDIGO 2 and 14 with maximum KDIGO 3 required renal replacement therapy. Mortality was at 11.8% (95%CI 6.4% to 19.4%).ConclusionAcute kidney injury, established and classified according to KDIGO as severe and its maximum stage, was associated with worse clinical outcomes; early therapeutic efforts should focus on preventing the progression to severe stages.